logo
Olivia Munn Claims ‘The Newsroom' Director Tried to 'Ruin' Career

Olivia Munn Claims ‘The Newsroom' Director Tried to 'Ruin' Career

Cosmopolitan2 days ago
Olivia Munn isn't holding back. On the most recent episode of Dax Shepherd's Armchair Expert podcast, the actor and activist revealed she was nearly blacklisted in Hollywood after she disagreed with a male director while she was on HBO's The Newsroom.
'There was a storyline where my character and Tom Sadoski's character are dating and falling in love,' Olivia explained to Dax and his co-host, Monica Padman. Without naming names, she added that the director kept pushing the romantic storyline on her performance rather than Tom's.
'He kept trying to force me to carry that storyline only on my side. He's like, 'Can you look out at him and smile?' And I'm like, 'Why? She's busy doing this?' Or, 'Can you stop and snuggle up to him or flirt with him?' Or, 'Can you give him a kiss?' And I'm like, 'This is in the middle of working,'' she shared, describing the nature of the scene.
The Your Friends & Neighbors star also revealed that someone on her team notified her that the director told film studios she was 'difficult' to work with after they disagreed on set.
'I was on the one-yard-line for the movie and my manager calls me and says, 'Hey, you're gonna get the role. But first, I guess there's another director who they know and he says that on The Newsroom, you were late all the time and really combative,'' Olivia said, though she didn't mention the movie in question.
She continued, 'I lived seven minutes from there. I was never late. I was like, 'I know who this is.' He just was trying to bash me. And I told my reps, 'Please tell the directors this.' And then I still got the role. But I will always remember that just because of our conflicts of how we approached a role, he wanted to ruin my chances of getting anything else.'
Olivia starred on the HBO series as Sloan Sabbith for three seasons from 2012 to 2014 before moving on to projects like X-Men: Apocalypse, Ocean's Eight, and The Daily Show over the years.
ICYMI, tune in to Olivia Munn's full conversation with Dax Shepherd on Armchair Expert below.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tonya Lee Williams Opens Up About Olivia's Future — and Fans May Be Surprised
Tonya Lee Williams Opens Up About Olivia's Future — and Fans May Be Surprised

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Tonya Lee Williams Opens Up About Olivia's Future — and Fans May Be Surprised

Tonya Lee Williams is famous for her role as Olivia on The Young and the Restless. The actress played the Genoa City doctor from 1990 to 2012. It's been 13 years since her departure and fans are wondering if Williams will ever return as Olivia. For over two decades, Williams entertained Y&R viewers as Olivia. The character was a fan favorite and prominent member of the beloved Winters family. In 2012, the actress left the soap, but the door was open for her character's return. With Olivia's son Nate (Sean Dominic) now in Genoa City, fans feel it's time for the doctor to return. But if the character ever comes back, Williams won't be in the role. The actress has previously stated she has no desire to return to Y&R. In an interview with The TV Watercooler, the actress reiterated her reasons for not coming back. 'I love the show, but I don't even know how to get into the headspace of that character that I've not played in so long,' she explained. WATCH THIS: Check out Soap Hub's new podcast, Soap Hub Says, here! Although Williams isn't returning, she feels that shouldn't be the end of Olivia. 'I think they should recast!' Williams exclaimed. As for who should take over her role, Williams replied, 'Oh, no — I have no idea! Zero idea, but the character was really wonderful, and I think it would be great.' Williams has given her blessing for Y&R to recast Olivia if they choose to do so. But the question is when and if the character will return. Do you think Y&R should recast Olivia? Let us know in the comment section. Got a red hot theory about your favorite soap storyline? Email news@ — yours could be our next hot topic!

All About Aimee Lou Wood's Boyfriend, Adam Long
All About Aimee Lou Wood's Boyfriend, Adam Long

Elle

time9 hours ago

  • Elle

All About Aimee Lou Wood's Boyfriend, Adam Long

Actress Aimee Lou Wood first became famous as Aimee Gibbs on Sex Education, but her dramatic role on HBO's The White Lotus spurred an even deeper interest in the star's personal life. Woods, however, prefers to keep her personal life private. In 2021 she told Grazia, 'I find it hard when I'm in relationships to maintain my sense of who I am. I'm very independent, but I'm also quite impressionable. I can be taken away from myself quite easily, I kind of start betraying myself and compromising my integrity, to keep someone else happy. That's why it's really important for me to have time alone.' Wood did previously date her Sex Education co-star Connor Swindells, but they broke up amicably after a few years together. She also told Grazia, 'We'd had some time apart and then we realized that maybe the relationship wasn't serving us both. We still really love each other and respect each other. It was an okay breakup, it wasn't dramatic. I felt like a dam burst, then all of a sudden I was hurting, but I needed to be there, because I'd become a bit numb and it was nice to suddenly feel everything again.' In June 2025, it was reported there was a new love in her life: actor Adam Long. By July, Wood was making things Instagram official with a photo in her Stories of a night out with her co-star. Here's everything we know about the new couple so far. The 34-year-old actor is best known for his role on British detective series, Happy Valley, where he plays convict Lewis Whippey. His other credits include Spike Island, Bancroft, Dunkirk, The Thirteenth Tale, Vera, The Kill Team, Masters of the Air, Nine Bodies in a Mexican Morgue, and Day of the Jackal. Long doesn't post a lot on Instagram, but he is into long-distance running and working out. He even did the Ironman competition: Long and Wood are starring in the BBC's series Film Club together, where they were actually cast as a couple. The show is about a girl named Evie who is navigating saying goodbye to her best friend after they get a job across the country. Wood actually co-wrote the show with real-life friend Ralph Davis. It's unclear when they first started dating, but they've been working on Film Club for the past year. The couple was first seen sharing a kiss in June, per the Daily Mail. In July 2025, Wood made her relationship with actor Adam Long Instagram official when she shared a picture of him in her Stories from their recent trip to the Glastonbury musical festival. In the nighttime photo, Long is laying in Wood's lap with his arms up and wrapped around her. The star is wearing sunglasses and a jean jacket with pink bottoms. She has her hair styled in two braids.

Jim Shooter, editor who ‘saved the comics industry,' dies at 73
Jim Shooter, editor who ‘saved the comics industry,' dies at 73

Boston Globe

time11 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Jim Shooter, editor who ‘saved the comics industry,' dies at 73

Powerfully built, with a looming 6-foot-7 frame, Mr. Shooter dominated the comic-book world for much of the 1980s, reinvigorating an art form that had been in decline by finding new markets and new readers. Although he was not yet 30 when he took over at Marvel in 1978, he was already an industry veteran. He sold his first comic story, to DC, Marvel's rival, when he was just 14, and he worked for both companies while still a teenager. Advertisement As editor-in-chief at Marvel, he rationalized what had been a chaotic operation, instituting a coherent editing process and driving his staff to meet deadlines. He pushed into the growing comic-store market, targeting dedicated fans over the casual reader. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up And he drove the company further into licensing opportunities, signing the sort of deals for toy and film adaptations that went on to make comics an enduring keystone of American popular culture. 'I honestly think he saved the comics industry,' Harry Broertjes, a journalist who once worked with Mr. Shooter, said in an interview. Mr. Shooter could be imperious, but he could also be generous, and he welcomed new talent to the Marvel fold. Emerging voices such as Frank Miller and Walter Simonson flourished under his watch, bringing a new, more sophisticated sensibility to the genre. He increased pay rates for writers and artists and gave them more control over their creative output. Advertisement Marvel prospered in the 1980s. Not only did its sales and profits soar, but it also experienced a long run of landmark releases, among them Simonson's work on Thor; Miller's work with Klaus Janson on Daredevil; and Chris Claremont and John Byrne's on X-Men. At the same time, Mr. Shooter brought a traditional vision to comic-book writing, insisting on simple, straightforward narratives. Among his many aphorisms was 'Every comic book could be a reader's first comic book,' and he made his writers find a way to introduce their main characters in each issue. His changes were divisive, especially among those who had enjoyed free rein under previous editors, above all Stan Lee, who put Marvel on the map with a new line of superhero titles in the 1960s. Several Marvel veterans left for DC. 'Some people swear by him, and other people swear at him,' Bill Sienkiewicz, an artist at Marvel during Shooter's tenure, said in an interview. In 1986, New World Entertainment bought Marvel's parent company, Marvel Entertainment Group, and a year later, the new owners fired Mr. Shooter. The feelings about his time at Marvel were so passionate that even years later, his critics spoke of him in brutal terms. 'From a creative standpoint, Jim Shooter's Marvel was, by and large, a wasteland of formulaic self-imitation and blatant profit-seeking,' Jordan Raphael and Tom Spurgeon wrote in their book 'Stan Lee and the Rise and Fall of the American Comic Book' (2003). Advertisement But Mr. Shooter was equally beloved by many artists and fans, who saw the Shooter era at Marvel as the foundation for the efflorescence of comic-book storytelling in the decades that followed. 'Every bad thing you've heard about Jim Shooter has a bit of truth to it,' Danny Fingeroth, another Marvel writer under Mr. Shooter, said in an interview. 'But so does every good thing you've heard.' James Charles Shooter was born Sept. 27, 1951, in Pittsburgh. His father, Ken, was a steelworker, and his mother, Eleanor, managed the home. Jim's mother used children's comics to teach him to read, but he hadn't perused a comic book in years when, in 1963, he found himself in the hospital for minor surgery with a stack of Marvel and DC books to read. He loved what he saw in Marvel, but he found DC boring. As a challenge, he pulled out the narrative and artistic elements that he admired in Marvel and applied them to stories he wrote using DC characters. On a whim, he sent them to DC headquarters in New York. The editors liked them so much that they not only published them (with new art) but hired him to write for the company's Legion of Superheroes line. It was good timing: Union strikes and jobsite injuries had left his father unable to work, and his family needed the money. While still in high school, he wrote for DC's Superman and Supergirl titles, created several new members of the Legion of Superheroes, and in 1967, with artist Curt Swan, created a story pitting Superman and the Flash in a race — a hugely popular issue. After being accepted at New York University and offered a job at Marvel, he moved to New York in 1969. He passed on school to take the job, but he quit after a few weeks because the pay was so low. Advertisement He returned to Pittsburgh, got a job in advertising and, for several years, completely dropped out of the comic-book world. About five years later, a group of fans tracked him down and encouraged him to return to New York. Offered jobs at both DC and Marvel, he chose Marvel in 1976. Two years later, he was in charge. Mr. Shooter's marriage to Michele Minor ended in divorce. A complete list of survivors in addition to his son was not immediately available. After leaving Marvel, Mr. Shooter started a number of independent comic-book companies, including Valiant, Defiant and Broadway. Valiant met with some success, but all the companies eventually closed shop. He ended his career as creative editor for Illustrated Media, a company that creates customized comics. He also became a fixture on the comic convention circuit, where he would give lectures about storytelling. He had a simple message, built around the nursery rhyme 'Little Miss Muffet.' In an economical 27 words and two sentences, he said, you have everything: a character, an action, a climax and a resolution. 'If you can remember 'Little Miss Muffet,'' he wrote in an essay on his website, 'you can remember everything you need to know about the basic unit of entertainment, which is a story.' This article originally appeared in

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store